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A 62-year-old ball python at the St. Louis Zoo was believed to be the oldest snake ever documented in a zoo. Even more wild, she later laid seven eggs despite not being near a male for at least two decades.
Not shown: Zac immediately trying to retcon the bit 💀
▶️ Watch the entire season of Dimension 20: Gladlands on Dropout!
Welcome to the Gladlands— The world might have ended, but manners didn't!
Norm fucking Spellman saved my ass in my biology A-level exam today.
I can't exactly say I studied much (tbh not at all). When one of the tasks was "Define the term parthenogenesis", I was sure I've never heard the word before in class/official context, and that I'm just gonna skip the question.
But a few minutes later, I realized that I DID heard it before: "It was a parthenogenic birth. You're genetically identical to the Avatar. There litrally is no father."
He just explained the term to all of us a few weeks ago! So I wrote a more general, smart-sounding version of that.
Thank you for the help Norm, you're my favorite scientist now😌
"I wish some one would write a book about dreams and parthenogenesis—for that the two are part and parcel of the same story—a brood of folly without father bred—I cannot doubt." From Erewhon Revisited by Samuel Butler (1901).

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A team of entomologists and reptile specialists from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, the Chiricahua Desert Museum, the
So, uh. Parthenogenesis (or, "virgin birth"--female animals having children without ever mating) is recorded in a few mantis species. But...apparently it exists in a few more, too.
See, I had Bo, a shield mantis (Rhombodera megaera), and I know for a fact that she never mated. So, when she made an ooth (egg sac), I assumed it was nonviable and put it in a little jar with rice to desiccate and preserve it.
Recently, though, I checked up on it...
Looking closely, you can see the raptorial claws and the long prothorax, plus the little flat flipped-up abdomen. There's nothing that could be but a baby praying mantis :|
So, then I thought about the other ooths I have. My ghost mantises (two females, Phantasma and Goria) laid tons of ooths all over their sticks, and again, never mated. And sure enough, when I look at one of them now...
See, this was a stick I kept out in the open. And when baby mantises come out of the ooth, they're initially these little larval things called pronymphs that they immediately molt from. On top of that, this is exactly the color and texture the mother had.
This looks like a pronymph shed. So, somewhere in my room, for a little while, there was probably a baby ghost mantis wandering around.
I have never heard of parthenogenesis in either of these species or any other members of their genuses. How common is this?!!
i'm pregnant and it's mine #parthenogenesis